Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 213, Decatur, Adams County, 9 September 1937 — Page 3

|iIN SOCIETY

DERATION of clubs ,MEET WEDNESDAY rt r(l . Henry He’ter, Mrs. W. Guy ,*ii. Miss Vivian Burk and Mrs. nl Tyndall will be hostesses to i County Federation of Clubs at , home of Mrs. Tyndall Wednes- ; afternoon at two-thirty o’clock. , taos the state federation etiiot at French Lick and of the iinil meeting at Winchester will given. Plans for the year will o* be discussed at this meeting. C! department chairmen and fedled club president* are invited. phe Womep of the Moose will d their regu’ar meeting at the ose Home Thursday evening at -en thirty o'clock. Plans will be je to attend the district meeting Marion Sunday, Sept. 19. All mbers are urged to be- present. fr. and Mrs. Archie Hendricks louth of Monroe entertai.led over week-end for Mr. and M>-s. Berd Reffy and son Junior. Mr. and i. Lewis Thompson and datighJoy of Mt. Pleasant. Mich., Mrs. tie Michael of St. Louis, .Mich., s Hellen Michael of New York ,-, Harry Smith of Cleveland, o. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Peabody F.rt Wayne and Mr. and Mrs. gil Hendricks and daughter Colof Berne. i meeting of the Y. M. P. C. of Evangelical church will be held irsday evening at 7:30 o'clock at home of Miss Joanna Daily. 'he tenth annual Bell reunion I be held at Memorial park iday. September 12. — o I Wife Weary of Moving Inn Jose, Cal. (U.R>— Moving was I too much for Mrs. Lessie E. Ight. In fact, after moving 37 es in 11 years of married life, [AKE UP YOUR LIVER BlLEbout Calanel—And Ym'll Jump Out »f Bed is the Morning Rarin’ to Co liver should pour out two pounds of lid bile into your bowels uaily. If this bils ut flowing f rvely. your food doesn’t digest j ust decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up r stomach. You got constipated. Your Die system is poisoned and you feel sour, k and the world looks punk, natives are only makeshifts. A ncers rel movement doesn’t get nt th* ciuse. It ♦*s those good, old Carter’s Little Liver i Is to get these two pounds of bile flowing tly and make you feel “up and up’’. Harml. gentle, yet amazing in making bile flow ily. Ask for Carter’s Little Liver Pills by ne. Stubbornly refuse anything elsa. Zue. !

the IcenetSii

By HARRISON CARROLL Copyright, 1937 King Kcalurrs Syndicate, Inc. jIOLLYWOOD — Lots of unJeduled Excitement up in taverville for the Warner locaIDn troupe

2 Bi f ▼ George Brept

iking “Gold Where You id It". They re about to Dtograph a me of Ji ylulic mining (rations when ‘ of the hoses >ke loose from itandard. The earn of water tied George ent against a uld e r and

ocked h i m !, then caught Director Mike rtiz and the camera crew and shed them 20 yards down a Ich. All the morning’s output film was ruined in the dousing d the battered company of tors and technicians had to lay for the day. Jn his next vacation, Dr. Dafoe coming to Hollywood. The intry doctor will be the houseest of the man who portrays n on the screen—Jean Hersholt. i date is set, for Dr Dafoe's cations depend upon the state health of his famous charges. It the physician has written a iter accepting Hersholt's invitain. He'U make the trip some he next year and Hollywood is inning a reception that will top B one that New York gave to the in who brought the Dionne intuplets into the world. The romance reports about Nan icy Brill and John Eldredge are I wet, but the much-headlined ung lady gave Reno and the rrounding country quite a thrill, ipecially Calneva, where she and breakfast food heiress jumped ;o the swimming pool with their >thes on and, afterwards, had to rsuade a storekeeper to open his tabllshment and outfit them in .98 dresses, Answering Your Questions! anda Cheek, Chicago: If Virginia •uce is interested in anybody, ey say, it is Architect Walter uardeman. He is doing her use. Add to pathetic Hollywood jhts, the down-and-out actress, former star, who is to be found

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 Thursday Lantern Star Regular Stated 1 Meeting, Masonic Hall, 7:30 p. m. ‘ Presbyterian Missionary society, church parlors, 2:3b p. m. Christian church Ladies Aid, ' church parlors, 2 p. m. Baptist Women's society, Mrs. Will Winnes, 2:30 p. m. Woman's Home Missionary Car-ry-in Luncheon, M. E. Church, 12:30 • p. m. So Cha Rea Chib, Mrs. Clem Kortenber, 7:15 p. m. : Union Chapel Missionary Society Mrs. Freeman Schnepp, 1:30 p. m. Mt. P'easant Ladles' Aid Society, Mrs. Chalmer Sheets, 2 p. m. Women of Moose, Moose Home. 7:30 p. m. Friday 1 Y. M. C. Claes Pot Luck Supper, Dr. and Mrs. Joe Morris, 6:30 p. m. I Eighth Street U. B. W. M. A. ' Meeting, church, 7:30 p. m. Girls Ch.-4r, Zion Reformed ' Church 8 p. nt. Rummage and Baked Goods Sale, Decatur Hatchery Building. Union Chapel C. I. S. Class, Mr. and and Mns. Freeman Schnepp, 7:30 p. m. Atfxiliary Pot Luck Supper, American Legion Home, 6:15 p. m. Better Homes Club, Mrs. Harvey Rupert, 7:30 p. m. Saturday Rummage and Baked Goods Sale, Decatur Hatchery Building. Northeast District Ind., State ■Nurses’ Picnic, Sunset Park 4:30 CST. 1 Orchestra Practice, United Breth- ; ren Church, 6 p. m. Choir Practice, United Brethren ; Church, 7 p. m. Wednesday C. .unty Federation of Clubs, Mrs. [John Tyndall, 2:30 p. m. 1 11 111 1 ' '■ ■" ii ' she has asked for a divorce. The 1 moving, she charged, was due to i her husband's inability to hold a ■ job. o Prisoners Freed to Fight Fire Cushing, Me. (U.PJ — Twenty-five I inmates of Thomaston State Prison made a dash through the prisj on gates to the open road —but on’ly as fire fighters. Ernest New- : bert’s farm was fired and the prisI onera formed a bucket bigade and 1 put out the blaze. All returned.

each day sipping an inexpensive drink at tbjj Cinnebar case. She always sits just beneath the picture taken of herself at the peak of her career. Nothing like the Hollywood sense of humor. When Goldwyn's "Hur- ’ ricane” company was in Catalina, ' one of the scenes was of Jon Hall, ' who plays the native hero, swimming out into the surf while 1 three marksmen fired bullets just far enough away not to hit him. ’ The men behind the guns, Captain C. E. Andrews, Pardner Jones and Duke Leo, make a business of ’ trick shooting for the movies and ■ never miss. But Director John Ford, who loves a rib, made Hall think they had been drunk for two days. The poor guy went through the scene expecting every shot to plug him in the back. More about the Anne ShirleyJohn Howard Payne honeymoon. After leaving the Santa Barbara Biltmore, poth donned blue jeans and shirts and are making the rest i of the trip via auto camps and out-of-the-way- hotels. A sort of a hobo honeymoon. Chatter. . . . Songwriter Mack Gordon dropped SIO,OOO in a single hour at Calneva, they say. ... A Reno scout says that Jack Doyle is poison to the local press boys, who, nevertheless, are working very hard to get that marriage story. . . . Hollywood rumors are wrong again about Paula Stone's romance cooling. Mrs. Will Rogers just gave a dinner for

> George Mason. . . . Jan Rubini is forgetting his marital troubles by fiddling in the Biltmore Bowl floor show. . . . The Frank McHughs are shipping two motorcycles t o Vancouver and will motor back t o Hollywood that way. Both machines have special- sidecars

Paula and Fiance Frank McHugh

fixed up as beds. . . . Dorothy Lamour is happy to have Husband Herb Kay working as close as the Catalina Casino. . . And Constance Bennett tells friends she signed so many autographs leaving New York that she had to have short wave treatments to ease the cramp in her hands.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1037,

BPERSONAIS Miss Clara Brown. whA Is 111 at the county Infirmary, remains about ! the same. She has been confined to iier bed for some time. Mrs. William Gass and Miss Dixie Miller were among those from ' Decatur who attended the Legion meeting at Marion today. Hardld Zimmerman, sin of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Zimmerman, left today for Richmond to enter Earlham college for his freshman year. Miss Harriet Fruchte. accompanied by 4i< r parents. Mr. and Mrs. J.Fred Fruchte, left today for Richmond. where she will enter Earlham College as a sophomore. Dick Burrell, of Rochester, was a business visitor here t»-day. Thad Hoffman has returned to his home In Chicago after a several weeks' visit with his aunt, Miss Fan Hite, and his sister, Miss Mary Jo Hoffman. Miss Ruth Smith has gone to Fort Wayne where she underwent ian operation for the extraction of her teeth at the Duemling clinic. Mr. and Mrs. John Caseman and son Douglas .'J Flint. Mich., epent the past week visiting with Mrs. Louva Carlson of Monroe. Helmith Carlson, who is employed in Flint. Mich., epent the weekend with Mrs. Carlson and son Arvid of Monroe. Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Stump, of Lat--obe, Pennsylvania, will be the week end guests of the Rev. and Mre. Harry Thompson. Mrs. Stump was formerly Miss Gladys ThompI son, of this city. Mrs. J. W. Breiner of Pittsburgh Penn., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Matt Breiner for several days. a CHICAGO TIMES '-.conttmufti whom »»mt man Schwarzmann, whom he named "fuehrer” of the Astoria. Long Island, post, told him that Jews in , the United States are ‘grabbing control of everything." He quoted Schwarzmann as saying: “This is exactly what took place iin Germany. Finally the people rose up in resentment. This will happen here —it is inevitable. When that day comes, and it probably is not far off. we must be prepared to fight for the right kind of gov- , ernment. » » • “There will likely be bloodshed and fighting.” Schwarzmann told him, Metcalfe wrote, that “in all likelihood the day of trouble will come with a financial crisis in Washington. Then will Be the time to wipe out” the Jews. Times reporters said the “American Hitler —the national fuehrer of the Amerikadeitscher Volksbund —” is Fritz Kuhn, former chemist for the Ford hospital in Detroit ..nd the Ford Motor company. His officers, they said, are in New York. District leaders, the Times said, are: Rudolf Markmann, 3326 73rd St., Jackson Heights, Long Island, New’ York. George Froeboese. 3227 N. 2nd St.. Milwaukee, Wis. Herman Schwinn, 634 W. 15th St., Los Angeles. Leader of the Chicago Deutscher Bund. Mueller wrote, is Fritz Heb- . erling. He quoted Heberdling as saying: “Ve are ufider vun man only— Hitler. Ve deal mit the consul general of Germany here in this B ■F 2x7) $4.. $5 The most talked about last of the season... a last with three dimensions, length, width and height Unusually comfortable and exceptionally smart. NICHOLS SHOE STORE

Hay Fever Season With Us Again

< . | Kercho-00-o! | W " dMIL» ■ Z « V gs' w * Protecting mask [ \ t W., 1 ■ y, * % F ___i 1 / \-A) L \ X. / S H SEPTEMBER 11 \ \ ; \ : T3eptem •••—-V ) J Y 9 \OCTOBEWI v*' Hay fever map | \j ,

Hay fever season is here again, bringing with it discomfort and misery to thousands throughout United States It is estimated that more than 2.000.000 suffer from the affliction which is caused chiefly by ragweed. Research has shown that skin tests can be made which reveal the particular substance, pollen or food to which an individual is allergic or hyper-sensitive. When this is determined concentrated extracts of the irritant, given to the victim over • period of time, often immunize him from further attacks, or at least relieve the suffering

i country. Ve take orders from Hitler —no vun else. * * * Ve has 1 netting to vorry about. Ve do no ’ harm. Ve do not has guns and ve ' do not shoot.” , The Times said: “There are thousands of GermanAmericans who will stretch their arms in a Hitler salute but who, ’ for financial or business reasons, ! are not members of the Bund. 1 Some who work for Jewish em- ; ployers are afraid to join. Other wealthier German-Americans contribute money secretly but have no outward connection with the or- ! ganization. The Times said there are 12,000,000 German-Americans in the United States and the “vast majority ’ of German Americans turn cold ' shoulders to the Nazi movement.”, ’ Kuhn's job, it said, is to enlist 1 them in the Bund. I ’ “German day celebrations in 1 . most parts of the country now are given over completely to praise of, Hitler. Swastikas appear at con- i certs, dances and literary meet- , ings, and professional Bund speak- J ers preach the doctrines of nation- , al socialism." - o Delay Inquest In New Haven Wreck 1 '1 ’ | Fort Wayne. Sept. 9.-—<U.R>—Wa- ’ bash railroad officials estimated, damage at more than $35,000 in the passenger train wreck at New, Haven, east of here, Tuesday night 1 which claimed the life of engineer David Kiracofe. 65, Detroit. 1 Inquest into the fatal accident < was delayed, pending result of in- < juries to Robert E. Miller, 39, De- 1 i troit, fireman on the Detroit to St.c

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Louis train. Miller was in Methodist hospital in a serious condition with a skull fracture. It was expected his testimony would clear the cause of the wreck. o Develop Program To Halt Tenant Farming Indianapolis. Sept. 9.—(U.P.) —De-j velopment of a program to reduce tenant farming in Indiana. Illinois. Ohio, lowa and Missouri was un- i der way today at third region headquarters of the farm security ad-1 ministration. Through the new agency, which ' recently supplanted the resettle-' ment administration, loans will be made available to approximately i 65,000 tenant farmers in Indina for purchase of land they now farm. Muselman Is Named To Library Board Judge Huber M. DeVoss has re- . appointed C. H. Muselman as a j membber of the Berne public library board for two years from July | 5, 1937, by an action made retro-1 active. Mr. Muselman was original- , ly appointed by Judge DeVotss, July I 5, 1935, as a member of the brard. j Robert Brod beck Enters Heidelberg September 9 —(Special)—Robert Brodbeck, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brodbeck, Decatur, Ind., has en-. ,’le<f as a freshman at Heidelberg College, Tiffin, Ohio. He will enter Monday, September 13. College officials expect a decided increase in enrollment.

Heavy Damage Caused By Indianapolis Fire Indianapolis, Ind., Sept. 9 —(UP) —A half dozzen families were routed from their honien and nearby business establishments were threatened early today by a fire which broke out in the Phoenix lumber hardware company, causing several thousand d'dlars damage. Cause of the blaze, which shot flames more than 100 feet in tho air, could not be determined immediately. It was be'ieved, however to have started in the rear of a frame office and storage building nearby. - o~ Another Strike Is Called At Huntington Huntington, Ind., Sept. 9 (UP) —Two-hundred and fifty employes of the Huntington shoe corporation were idle t.day after a strike workers union, a CIO affiliate, when negotiations for a wage Increase became deadlocked. Many workers reportedly were turned back by pickets when they attempted to ent r the plant this morning. Plan Registration For Unemployed Hyde Park, N. Y. Sept. 9—(UP)— 1 A “voluntary registration” of the I country’s unemployed, coupled with ! a count, of minima now outside the I government's old age pension eysi tern, through national election facil I ities and the post office department is being considered by Presine-nt Roosevelt, the United Press learned today. Means of taking the census of Heads Weight Board ROLLIN E. MEEK ; Weighing devices in the state are tested, checked and approved by the Bureau of Weights and Measures, Indiana Board of Health, of , which Rollin E. Meek, Greensburg, , is chief. Through this service the public and dealers alike are protected against inaccurate scales. County sealers of weights and measures are deputies under Mr. Meek. In recognition of his ability in his ; field, Meek was elected first vice- ' president of the National Confer- ' ence of Weights and Measures offij cials. He is president of the IndiI ana State Association of Inspectors of Weights and Measures. ! 'israrq ULES —the vegetable mucin whose protective demulcence ami detoxification brought relief and correction to thousands —at your Druggist*. Holt house Drug Co.

, >iblesH authorized congress were by the president at his ■ summer home thero with John D. I Biggers, Toledo, Ohio, Glass Coml pany president, a Republican. o— More Gigolos Than Guests f — J Nice. France (U.PJ —Young men'

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PAGE THREE

etiger to escort lonesome women who will pay bills are so numerous on the Riviera that there Is a slump In the straight "guide and escort" business. ''There nrt> 20 men to every woman in Cannes, I Nice and Monte Carlo, nil waiting for n chance to be charming for u 1 fee," one expert said.